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Timely Information from Prediction Markets

Authors :
Schoenebeck, Grant
Yu, Chenkai
Yu, Fang-Yi
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Prediction markets are powerful tools to elicit and aggregate beliefs from strategic agents. However, in current prediction markets, agents may exhaust the social welfare by competing to be the first to update the market. We initiate the study of the trade-off between how quickly information is aggregated by the market, and how much this information costs. We design markets to aggregate timely information from strategic agents to maximize social welfare. To this end, the market must incentivize agents to invest the correct amount of effort to acquire information: quickly enough to be useful, but not faster (and more expensively) than necessary. The market also must ensure that agents report their information truthfully and on time. We consider two settings: in the first, information is only valuable before a deadline; in the second, the value of information decreases as time passes. We use both theorems and simulations to demonstrate the mechanisms.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2011.03645
Document Type :
Working Paper